Charles was named
after his father, King Charles II. He was born in the house of his mother, Nell
Gwynne, in Lincoln's Inn Fields on 8th May 1670. It is said that,
one day when the King was with Nell, she called to the child, "Come
hither, you little bastard, and speak to your father."
"Nay, Nelly," said the King, "do not give the child such a
name."
"Your majesty," she answered, "has given me no other name by
which I may call him." Upon this, the King gave him the name of
Beauclerk and created him Earl of Burford. The story cannot be completely
accurate, however, for the child was created Baron Headington and Earl of
Burford, both in Oxfordshire, before the end of 1670, the year of his birth.
In 1684, he was created Duke of St. Albans and, on Easter day of that year,
accompanied his father and two other natural sons of the King, the Dukes of
Northumberland and Richmond, when Charles II made his offering at the altar
at Whitehall, the three boys entering before the King within the rails. He
was at that time, Evelyn says, "a very pretty boy". During the
last illness of his mother, it was said that the Duke was about to go to
Hungary from whence he would return a good catholic; and that the other
natural sons of the late King, known as the fraternity, "would be on
the same foot or give way as to their advantageous stations". Upon his
mother's death, on 14th November 1687, Beauclerk received a considerable
estate, the chief property of which was Burford
House, adjoining Windsor
Castle.

The next year, the
Duke fulfilled one part of a general expectation of him, for, in 1688, he
served in the Holy Roman Imperial army against the Turks, and was present at
the taking of Belgrade on 20th August of that year. Meanwhile, the regiment
of horse he commanded in England was placed under the command of Colonel
Langston, who in November 1688 brought it to join the Prince of Orange. The
Duke took his place in the House of Lords on 9th November 1691. On 17th May
1693, he left for Flanders and served under William III in the campaign of
Landen. A false report even being brought to London that be had fallen in
that battle. The Duke was a gallant soldier, and was highly esteemed by the
King, who gave him many tokens of his regard. On his return from Flanders,
William made him captain of the band of pensioners. He attempted to reform
the corps but, on a complaint made by certain of the members the council,
decided that it was to be kept on the same footing as it had been under Lord
Lovelace, the last captain. In April 1694, the Duke married Lady Diana de
Vere, daughter and sole heiress of Aubrey de Vere, the 20th and last Earl of
Oxford. He served in Flanders as a volunteer in the July following and, the
next month, received a pension of £2,000 a year from the Crown, half of
which was paid out of the ecclesiastical first-fruits. The hereditary office
of Master Falconer and the reversion of the office of Register of the High
Court of Chancery had been granted him by his father. The reversion came to
him in 1697 and was worth £1,500 a year. In the late Summer of that year,
he was again with the King in Flanders when he received Peter the Great of
Russia in Utrecht.

Upon Beauclerkís
return to England, after the conclusion of the Peace of Ryswick, King
William gave him "a set of coach horses finely spotted like
leopards" in appreciation of his services. In December 1697, he was
sent to Paris to offer the King's congratulations on the marriage of the
Duke of Burgundy with Mary Adelaide, daughter of Victor Amadeus II of Savoy.
He had the good fortune, the next year, to escape from three highwaymen,
who, on the night of 18th June, plundered between thirty and forty persons
on Hounslow Heath, the Duke of Northumberland being among those attacked.
These men attempted to attack the Duke of St. Albans, "but he was too
well attended". In 1703, he received a further grant of £800 a year
voted by the Parliament of Ireland. The Duke voted for the condemnation of
Dr. Sacheverell and, consequently, on the triumph of the tory ministry, in
January 1712, he was dismissed from his office of Captain of the Pensioners.
He was, however, reinstated by King George I, and, in 1718, was made a
Knight of the Garter. The Duke of St. Albans died in 1726 and his Duchess,
who was a celebrated beauty, 1742. He was buried in Westminster Abbey and
she in St. George's Chapel,
Windsor. The two had eight
sons: the eldest succeeded to his fatherís title; the third was created
Lord Vere of Hanworth in 1750; the fourth, Henry, was a poverty-stricken MP
who lived at Foliejon Park
in Winkfield; the fifth, Sydney, a notorious
fortune-hunter, was the father of the celebrated wit, Topham Beauclerk, both
lived at Pilgrim Place in Windsor
and Tyle Place in Old Windsor; the eighth son, Aubrey
Beauclerk, was a famous naval captain during the War of the Austrian
Succession.

Edited from Leslie
Stephen's 'Dictionary of National Biography' (1885).